USA > New Jersey > Memorial cyclopedia of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 25
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(III) Charity Floyd, born April 6, 1692, died June 1, 1758. She married (first) in 1714, Benjamin Nicoll. Children: Wil- liam Nicoll, who inherited the manor at Islip, Long Island ; Benjamin Nicoll (see Royal Descent XXXII) ; Glorianna Mar- garetta Nicoll, married George Maverick. She was buried with her mother, under
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the chancel of Old Trinity Church, New York. Their tombstone is now at the right of the vestibule in the pavement. Samuel Nicoll's vault is near the Law- rence monument.
(IV) Benjamin Nicoll, Jr., married Magdalen Mary Holland, and had :
(V) Dr. Samuel Nicoll, married Anne Fargie, and had:
(VI) Frances Mary Nicoll, married George B. Evertson, and had:
(VII) Frances Mary Evertson, mar- ried William Amos Woodward, and had :
(VIII) Mary Nicoll Woodward, mar- ried Erastus Gaylord Putnam.
(Holland Ancestry).
Arms-Argent, a chevron between three fleurs- de-lis, gules.
Crest-A lion rampant, or.
Motto -- Libertas et natale solum.
(I) Captain Henry Holland, "born Au- gust 28, 1661, at Ormkirk in Lancashire, in Old England, died in Albany, New York, May 6, 1736, and was buried under themnorth side of the communion table in St. Peter's Church, in the city of Albany, on Saturday, 8th of May, 1736, at a half an hour after four o'clock in the after- noon" (Ed. Holland's Bible). He was lieutenant in 1699 of an independent com- pany of Fusileers stationed at Albany, in the province of New York, captain 1704; commander of garrison at Albany, 1723-1732; high sheriff, 1706-1710, and from 1720-1722 commissioner of Indian affairs (Calendar of Historical Manu- scripts in the office of Secretary of State, Albany, E. B. O. Callahan, part II, pp. 268, 294, 300, 480, 805; New York Gene- alogical and Biographical Record, vol. ix, No. 3, July, 1878, p. 129; New York Civil List, 1869, pp. 41, 57). In 1732 he became incapacitated "by the Province of Al- mighty God."
He married Jennie (Jane) Sehly, born
at Brandon, in the county of Cork, in Ireland, August 5, 1676, died in New York City, September 12, 1756, and in- terred in Edward Holland's vault in Trin- ity Churchyard, New York, and had issue : Mary, baptized 9 February, 1701; Ed- ward, mentioned below; Henry, men- tioned below; Sehley (Zelia), baptized 5 January, 1707, married Peter Livingston (records of Albany Dutch Church).
The Sehly arms :
Arms-Gules, a chevron between three owls argent, beaked and legged or.
Crest-A demi-lion rampant ermine, ducally crowned or, holding a cross crosslet fitchee gold.
(II) Edward Holland, born in Albany, New York, baptized in the old Dutch Church, 6 September, 1702. His sponsors were "My Lord Cornbury" (His Excel- lency, Edward Hyde, Lord Viscount Cornbury, was Governor of New York, and afterwards succeeded his father as Earl of Clarendon), and "Maria Van Rensselaer." He was mayor of Albany, 1733-41 ; commissioner of Indian affairs, 1734-42; mayor of New York, 1747-57; member of Colonial Council, 1748-56; master, Court of Chancery, 1748-50; ves- tryman of Trinity Church, New York, 1745-57. In August, 1746, when Philip Van Cortlandt, one of the council, died, Governor Clinton appointed "Edward Holland, Esq., a gentleman of fortune and character," as he states, to succeed him. In 1747 he owned the brigantines "Wil- liam," Captain John River, and "The Two Friends," Captain Thomas Seymour, which he petitioned might be used as flags of truce to carry French prisoners to Cape Francois.
He was married (first) June 24, 1726, by Mr. Molinaer, minister of the French church, to Madeleine Mary, daughter of Thomas Bayeux and Madeleine Boudinot. Children: 1. Magdalen Mary, mentioned
170
LIBERTAS ET NATALE SOLUM.
Holland
MUCUS - BRISAS
CMLY
-
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
below. 2. Jane, born September 21, 1729; marriage license, 31 January, 1757, with Lambert Moore, Esq., Deputy Secretary of New York; Comptroller of Customs, and clerk of Trinity Church. She died Sunday, 14 June, 1767, aged thirty-seven, and was interred the next evening in the family vault at Trinity. (Issue not men- tioned). 3. Ann, baptized 15 October, 1732, died young. 4. Elizabeth, born April 17, 1731 ; married Joseph Hopkins ; no children ; she died at Coeymans, New York, in 1815. Edward Holland married (second) December 10, 1739, by the Rev. Mr. Charlton, Frances, the youngest child of Hon. William Nicoll and Anne Van Rensselaer. Obituary: "She was a com- position of merit and good sense." One child: Henry Holland, born 15 Decem- ber, 1742, died 7 October, 1774, unmar- ried. Edward Holland died in the city of New York, on Wednesday, November 10, 1756, and was interred the next day in his vault in Trinity Church. His will was signed two days before his de- cease. Brother Henry Holland, Esq., of . New York, and brother-in-law, Benjamin Nicoll, as executors. Proved 12 Febru- ary, 1759 (Lib. XXI, 209). His daughter,
(II) Magdalen Mary Holland. Family Bible of Edward Holland : "June 18, 1727. This morning, being Saturday, about 4 o'clock, my wife was brought to bed of a daughter, who was baptized the same day by Mr. Peters van Driezen, and had for her godfather, Captain Henry Hol- land, and for her godmother, Magdalen Bayeux; was named Mary Magdalen." She married Benjamin Nicoll, (no date), and had:
(IV) Dr. Samuel Nicoll, who married his second cousin, Anne Fargie, and had : (V) Frances Mary Nicoll, who mar- ried George B. Evertson, and had :
(VI) Frances Mary Evertson, who mar- ried William Amos Woodward, and had :
(VII) Mary Nicoll Woodward, who married Erastus Gaylord Putnam.
(II) Henry Holland, second son of Captain Henry Holland, was born in Al- bany, New York, baptized I March, 1704, will proved 22 May, 1782 (register's office, New York). His sponsors were "Captain Matthews, Captain Shenks and Madam Winks." He was alderman, 1727; slieriff of Albany, 1739-1746; removed to New York ; member of Provincial Assem- bly from Richmond county, 1761-1769; incorporator of the Society Library of New York, November 25, 1772; in 1765 one of the managers on part of the prov- ince of New York, in the controversy concerning the partition line between that province and New Jersey. In 1770 he was a master in chancery for appraising and settling real estate, by order of the court. He was interested in 1756 in the privateer brigantine "Hawk," thirty-four guns, Captain John Alexander, and the ship "Blakeney," fifty-four guns, Captain John White.
He married, 14 December, 1728, Alida, baptized 29 November, 1702; sponsors Johannes Vanhaegel and Debora Hansse, died 13 September, 1748, daughter of Jo- hannes Martense Beeckman, buried Sep- tember 30, 1732, patentee of the Kayer- derosseras patent, Saratoga county, New York, November 2, 1708, and his wife, Eve Vinhaegen, married, October 26, 1692, buried August 28, 1746, son of Mar- ten and Susannah Beeckman (O'Calla- ghan's Manuscripts, Part II, pp. 659-65- 756, 173, 83, 94, 805. pp. 33, 47, 57 ; The Charter and By-Laws, New York Society Library, 1773, p. 2), and had :
(III) Eve Holland, born in Albany, New York, baptized 27 June, 1736; mar- riage license 24 May, 1757, with Winter Fargie, captain in the British army (New York Marriage Licenses previous to 1784), and had three daughters: Anne,
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who married Dr. Samuel Nicoll, June 1, his name appears in registry October 17, 1782; Elizabeth, born November 12, 1766, 1669; an entry September 15, 1680, speaks of him and wife as deceased. Their chil- dren were: Jean, married Marie Brechet ; Pierre, married Jeanne Guis; Elie, mar- ried Jeanne Baraud; Judith, married Pierre Vigoureux; Esther; Marie. To the name of each brother and of the brother-in-law Vigoureux, Le Sieur, is prefixed. died 1792, buried in Trinity Churchyard, in Henry Holland's vault, married, March 4, 1784, Dr. John Onderdonk, died June II, 1786; Alida, who married, as his sec- ond wife, Cornelius Roosevelt, and had Eliza Roosevelt, who married Walter Evertson, and had Maria Elizabeth Evert- son, who married Dr. John Brigham. Captain Fargie on one of his visits to England bought three emerald rings set with diamonds for his three daughters. Mrs. Onderdonk left hers to her sister, Mrs. Roosevelt; one was lost and the other was stolen. Mrs. Nicoll's ring is now in possession of her great-grand -. daughter, Mrs. Putnam.
The Fargie arms :
Arms-Azure, a chevron surmounted by a crescent between two mullets argent. In base a beech tree or, debruising the chevron.
Crest-A mullet or.
Motto-Vis et amor. (Strength and Love.)
(IV) Anne Fargie, married, June ī, 1782, Dr. Samuel Nicoll, and had :
(V) Frances Mary Nicoll, who mar- ried George B. Evertson, and had:
(VI) Frances Mary Evertson, who married William Amos Woodward, and had:
(VII) Mary Nicoll Woodward, who married Erastus Gaylord Putnam.
(Boudinot Ancestry).
Arms-Azure, a chevron between two mullets in chief and a heart or, flames proper issuing therefrom, in point.
Crest-A laurel wreath with berries, all proper. Motto-Solideo gloria et honor.
The old Protestant registers of bap- tisms, marriages and interments at Mar- ans are preserved in the archives of the Consistory of La Rochelle, France.
(I) Jean Boudinot married Marie Suire ;
(II) Le Sieur Elie Boudinot, son of Jean and Marie (Suire) Boudinot, came from Aunis, a suburb of the seaport of La Rochelle, which had been the strong- hold of the Huguenot faith and fighting for nearly seventy years, and which, though dismantled and spoiled of its an- cient honors, was still the home of many of their wealthiest and most influential families. Le Sieur Helie Boudinot (as he is called in these records) was a mer- chant of ample means and eminent stand- ing, an elder of the Huguenot church. His name occurs more than once in the records of judicial prosecutions against nim for adhering to his faith. He mar- ried Jeanne Baraud, by whom he had five children, four of whom, with their mother, died in France. Immediately upon the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, Boudinot, with his son, Elie, Jr., escaped to England, where, on the 20 of March, 1686, he obtained letters of denization from King James II. Elie Boudinot made but a brief stay in Lon- don, but long enough to marry there, No- vember 2, 1686, Susanne Papin, widow of Benjamin d'Harriette, who, with her son, Benjamin d'Harriette, had fled from France. She was such an ardent Prot- estant that to escape she had to be rolled down to the ship in a barrel. There were four children by this marriage: John, Benjamin, Madeleine, and Susanne. Early in the year 1687 Elias Boudinot, with his family, was residing in New York, where
172
Boudinots
PAPIN
5
Bayeux
1011
VERTSENY
SUSANNA ROETERS WIFE OF JUDGE NICHOLAS EVERTSON
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
he united with Mr. Pretre in organizing the Huguenot church, of which he be- came the first elder. The old church stood on the ground now covered by the Produce Exchange Building. The new French church "du Saint Esprit," the fifth in descent from the Huguenot church, has a commemorative tablet to Elie Boudinot, His daughter Madeleine married Thomas Bayeux.
The Papin arms :
Arms-Gules, five fusils or, posed bendwise.
(III) Madeleine Boudinot, married Thomas Bayeux, and had :
(IV) Madeleine Mary Bayeux, who married Hon. Edward Holland, and had :
(V) Magdalen Mary Holland, who married Benjamin Nicoll, and had:
(VI) Dr. Samuel Nicoll, who married Anne Fargie, and had :
(VII) Frances Mary Nicoll, who mar- ried George B. Evertson, and had :
(VIII) Frances Mary Evertson, who married William Amos Woodward, and had:
(IX) Mary Nicoll Woodward, who married Erastus Gaylord Putnam.
(Bayeux Ancestry).
Arms-Per bend azure and or, in base an oak tree proper, on a mount vert.
Crest-A demi-lion rampant or.
Thomas Bayeux, a Huguenot refugee, merchant, was made freeman of the City of New York, May 10, 1705; married by license, dated July 14, 1703, Madeleine Boudinot, daughter of Elie Boudinot and Susanne Papin (Mad. d'Harriette; see Boudinot Line). They had eight chil- dren baptized in the French church, born between 1708 and 1725. Thomas Bayeux died 1742, leaving his house in King street, New York, and all his "real and personal estate in the Kingdom of France"
to his only son, Thomas, who married Mary Lispenard. His daughter Marie married the Rev. Richard Charlton, and Anne married John Groesbeck.
Madeleine Mary Bayeux, eldest daugh- ter of Thomas, married, June 24, 1726, Hon. Edward Holland. She was born in New York, July 21, 1706, died in Albany, New York, March 24, 1737, and was buried in the English Church on Satur- day the 26th, and had :
Magdalen Mary Holland, married Ben- jamin Nicoll, Jr., and had :
Dr. Samuel Nicoll, married Anne Far- gie, and had :
Frances Mary Nicoll, married George B. Evertson, and had :
Frances Mary Evertson, married Wil- liam Amos Woodward, and had :
Mary Nicoll Woodward, married Eras- tus Gaylord Putnam.
(Evertson Ancestry).
Arms-Argent, on two bars wavy vert, three single masted boats, two in chief and one in fesse, all proper.
Crest-Full rigged ship with sails furled, all proper, two mastheads or.
Supporters-Two wyverns erect vert, garnished or and langued gules.
(I) Evert Hendricssen, Stamvader, der Evertson Scheepsbevelhebber (ship cap- tain), gestorben (died) 1601,; getroud (married) first, Lentje Leynse, and had: (II) Johan Evertson, de Kapitein, died in battle at sea, 1617; married Maayken Jana, who died in 1647, and had :
(III) Johan Evertson, Knight of the Order of St. Michael, Lieutenant-Admiral Van Zeeland, born 1600, died August 5, 1666; slain in a sea fight against the Eng- lish; married, 1622, Maayken Cornelis- sen Gorcoms, daughter of Cornelius Jan- sen Gorcoms, sea captain. (His younger brother, Cornelius Evertson de Cude, was slain in the same battle). He had two
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ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
sons : Cornelius Evertson de Jongste, lieutenant-admiral Van Zeeland in 1684, and Gelyn Evertson, lieutenant-admiral in 1707. Admiral Johan Evertson had a son, Cornelis de Jonge, who was Vice- Admiral Van Zeeland in 1666, making the traditionary five admirals in the family, also had:
(IV) Evert Evertson, born 1630, lived in Weesp, Holland, a residential suburb of Amsterdam. He went to the West Indies probably in the expedition of his cousin, Cornelis Evertson de Jongste, in 1672. He left property in the Island of Tobago, inherited by his great-grandson, Jacob. He had :
(V) Nicholas Evertson, born Decem- ber 27, 1659, at two o'clock in the morn- ing, in Weesp, Holland. His will was proved October 24, 1723. He married, December 25, 1679, Marie van Huyge, born 1664. Their daughter, Willemyntje, was born 1686, at Monichendam, Hol- land. He later came to this country, and was captain of New York troops in an expedition against a French privateer in 1704. He married (second) June 9, 1698, Margaret Van Baal, daughter of Jan Hendrickse Van Baal, and had :
,
(VI) Nicholas Evertson, born May 24, 1699, in New York City, baptized in the Dutch Church, New York, died at South Amboy, New Jersey, March 17, 1783. He acquired a fine property, consisting of valuable clay banks on Raritan Bay, where he is buried. He was judge of Common Pleas, and Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Middlesex county, New Jer- sey, 1746, and justice of the peace of Mon- mouth county, New Jersey, 1747. He mar- ried Susanna, daughter of Jacob Roeters. The Roeters arms :
Arms-Per pale. Dexter side, azure, three codfish argent decollated, and each surmounted with a crown or, one in chief and two in base. Sinister side, per fess, in chief argent a lion
rampant gules, in base or, three martins close sable.
Crest-A demi-codfish argent decollated and surmounted by a ducal crown or.
(VII) Jacob Roeters Evertson (he dropped the middle name), born at South Amboy, New Jersey, January 3, 1734, died May 1, 1807; son of Nicholas and Susanna (Roeters) Evertson. He mar- ried, October 29, 1761, Margaret, daugh- ter of George Bloom, born August 29, 1744, died November 18, 1807.
The Bloom arms :
Arms-Azure, a dexter hand couped at the wrist argent.
Crest-A cubit arm erect, habited azure, cuff argent, holding in the hand proper some slips of broom, stalked vert, blossomed or.
Jacob Roeters Evertson moved to Amenia, New York, in 1762, where he came into possession by inheritance of about seventeen hundred acres of land "laying in the Nine Partners in Dutchess County, New York." His uncle, John Evertson, was one of the Nine Partners, recorded John Artsen. In 1763 Jacob built a large brick house in a superior manner, which is well preserved. His daughter Margaret was the wife of Gov- ernor John Cotton Smith, of Connecticut. The portraits of Jacob Evertson and his wife, preserved in the mansion at Sharon, Connecticut, show them to have been of fine personal appearance. Jacob Evert- son moved about 1795 to Pleasant Valley, Dutchess county, New York, where he died, and was buried in the graveyard of the Presbyterian church. He was elected a deputy from Dutchess county to the second Provincial Congress of New York, 1775-1776, and had :
1
(VIII) George Bloom Evertson, born February 20, 1773, near Amenia, Dutch- ess county, New York, died at Ithaca, Tompkins county, New York, August
174
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مهمصوب
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MADAME EVERTSON (MARGARET BLOOM)
MR. JACOB EVERTSON
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Jeo. B. Everton
FRANCES MARY NICOLL ) EVERTSON
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ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
12, 1829, where he is buried. He mar- ried (first) Cornelia, daughter of Dr. Peter Tappen, born March II, 1774, died January 29, 1808. Children : 1. John, died young. 2. Elizabeth, died unmarried. 3. Peter Tappen, died young. 4. John Roe- ters, married, and left descendants; one son, Evert, died in Honduras. 5. Cor- nelia, married Dr. Benjamin S. Halsey, and had: George Evertson, Clinton, Helen Tappen (married - - Granger) ; Tappen, and William Davies. George Bloom Evertson married (secondly) Frances Mary Nicoll, born December 17, 1785, died March 24, 1861, daughter of Dr. Samuel Nicoll. Children : 1. Ann Nicoll, died . young. 2. Frances Mary, married William A. Woodward (see Woodward). 3. Margaret Maria Bloom, married, 1830, Hart G. Lee (second, Rev. Mr. Ken- nedy), and had: James Wright Lee, married Rhoda Carlton; and Georgiana Frances, married James M. Douglass. 4. Adelaide Elizabeth, married Samuel Moore Mckay, and had: Robert Riddell, married Eliza Hun; Adelaide Elizabeth, married William L. Hubbard; Margaret Greenwood, married Hermanus Barkulo Hubbard; Mary Woodward, married Franklin Quinby. 5. Catherine Lewis, married John D. Dix, and had (now liv- ing) : George Woodward Dix and Lena Augusta. 6-7. Walter Davies and Eliza Ann,.twins; she died unmarried; he mar- ried Ann Mary Fathernee, and had: Alice Nicoll, David Barrow, George James (married Susan Davis), Mary Eliza, Walter Lee, Annie Elizabeth, and Adelaide Mckay.
George Bloom Evertson had sixteen children ; the last four of second marriage died in infancy.
(Teller).
Arms-Azure, a lion or, holding in paws a bezant.
Crest-A lion salient, or.
Wilhelmus Teller, the first settler, mer- chant, of New York, was born in 1620. In a deposition made July 6, 1698, he said that he arrived in this province in the year 1639; was sent to Fort Orange by Governor Kieft; served there as corporal, and was then advanced to be wachtmaes- ter of the fort ; that he had continued his residence at Albany from 1639 till 1692, with some small intermissions, and one short voyage to Holland. He was a trader for about fifty years in Albany, from whence he removed to New York in 1692, and continued in business there till his death in 1701. In his will made March 19, 1698, proved 1701, he spoke of but six of his nine children then living, viz .: Andries, Helena, Elizabeth, Wil- lem, Johannes, and Jannetie ; and though a prosperous merchant, the inventory of his property amounted only to f910 IOS 2d. There is reason to believe, however, that he had distributed most of his estate among his children before his death. He was one of the early proprietors of Sche- nectady in 1662, though he never resided there permanently, and one of the five patentees mentioned in the first patent of the town in 1684.
His first wife, Margaret Donckesen, died before 1664, in which year he made a marriage contract with Maria Verlett, widow of Paulus Schrick. His children were: I. Andries, born 1642. 2. Helena, born 1645, mentioned below. 3. Maria. born 1648. 4. Elizabeth, born 1652. 5. Jacob, born 1655. 6. Willem, born 1657. 7. Johannes, born 1659. The following were his children by his second wife: Caspar and Jannetie. Eight of his chil- dren are known to have married and had families. Helena Teller, born 1645, mar- ried (first) Cornelis, son of Rev. Ever- ardus and Anneke (Janse) Bogardus; married (second) Jan Hendrickse Van Baal, free trader in Beverwyck (Albany),
175
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
1661-78; she became a communicant of the Dutch church in New York, August 29, 1683, and was then the widow of Van Baal. She married there, September 26, 1683, Francis Rombout, mayor of New York in 1679; their daughter, Kathryn, married Roger Brett. He died in 1691. His widow Helena made her will November 20, 1706, proved March 4, 1707, in which she mentioned her eldest son, Cornelis Bogardus; her youngest daughter Cath- erine, wife of Isaac De Peyster; Mar- garet, wife of Nicholas Evertson ; Helena, wife of Dominie Gualtherus DuBois; their daughter Margaret married Cap- tain Alexander McLean; Rachel. wife of Petrus Bayard ; and Hannah, non com- pos mentis. Margaret VanBaal married Nicholas Evertson, and had Nicholas Evertson (2d), who married Susanna Roeters; they had Jacob Evertson, who married Margaret Bloom; they had George Bloom Evertson, who married Frances Mary Nicoll; they had Frances Mary Evertson, who married William A. Woodward ; they had Mary Nicoll Wood- ward, who married Erastus G. Putnam.
(Van Baal Ancestry-Van Bale, Van Bael, Van Balen).
Arms-Azure, two swords hilted or, placed in saltire.
Jan Hendrickse Van Baal was born in 1636, in Holland, and died in Albany, New York, in 1682. He was a free trader in Beverwyck (Albany), 1661-1678. Be- sides houses and land in the village, he had a patent for a large tract of land on the Norman Kill, which was sold to Omy La Grange and Johannes Syronse Veeder for f250. He was magistrate of Fort Orange, and Indian commissioner in 1664. 1666, 1670, 1672 ; and cornet in troop of Captain Jeremias Van Rensselaer. He signed the word "Commissaris" after his name, which means judge of the Court of
Admiralty. His wife was Helena Teller, widow of the Rev. Cornelis Bogardus. They had an only son, Hendrick, who died before 1716. He devised to his sis- ters a large property, the Minisink Pat- ent, lying in Ulster and Sullivan counties, New York (a part of this tract descended to George Bloom Evertson). Their daughters were: Hannah, non compos mentis; Maria, married Isaac de Peyster, a merchant of New York, December 27, 1687; Margaret, married Captain Nicho- las Evertson, a mariner of New York, marriage license dated December 13, 1697; Rachel, married (first) Henry Wileman of New York, (second) Petrus Bayard; Helena, married, January 1, 1700, Dominie Gualterius (Walter) Du Bois, pastor of the Dutch Church, New York, from 1699 to 1751, ancestor of John Wylie Barrow, who married Harriet Bowen Woodward, and had issue: Wil- liam Woodward, married Florence Daw- son ; Margaret Du Bois ; Anna Evertson ; Archibald Campbell, married Elizabeth Fraser; Mabel Rosalie, married Charles Noel Edge.
Margaret Van Baal, married Captain Nicholas Evertson, and had :
Hon. Nicholas Evertson, married Sus- anna Roeters, and had:
Jacob Evertson, married Margaret Bloom, and had:
George B. Evertson, married Frances Mary Nicoll, and had :
Frances Mary Evertson, married Wil- liam Amos Woodward, and had:
Mary Nicoll Woodward, married Eras- tus Gaylord Putnam.
(Beeckman Ancestry).
Arms-Azure, a running brook in bend, wavy argent, between two roses or.
Crest-Two wings sable, addorsed.
Motto-Mens conscia recti.
176
---
-
Dan Baal
MENS.CONSCIA.RECTI
Beeckman
SERVAT
ARCET
ET
Dinhargen
GARDEZ
BIEN
+
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
Marten Beeckman, born about 1660, was buried September 30, 1732. He was one of the patentees of the Kayaderos- seras, or Queensboro Patent, located in Saratoga county, New York, patent dated November 2, 1708. By his first wife, Machtel Schermerhorn, he had five chil- dren. He married (second) October 26, 1692, Eve Vinhaegen. She was buried August 28, 1746.
The Vinhaegen arms :
Arms-Azure, a bend argent, in chief a leg armoured and spurred of the second, in base a fox passant or, on a mount (terrace) vert.
Crest-The fox of the shield.
Motto-Şervat et arcet.
Marten Beeckman had by his wife, Eve Vinhaegen, ten children, the sixth being :
Alida Beeckman, baptized November 29, 1702, died September 13, 1748. Her baptismal sponsors were Johannes Vin- haegel and Debora Hansse. She married, in 1728, Henry Holland (see Holland) and had:
Eve Holland, married Captain Winter Fargie, and had :
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